Kenneth M. Dodgen
Thanks, David, and good morning, everyone. Our Q2 revenue was just under $1.9 billion, an increase of $327 million or 20.9% from the prior year, driven by double-digit growth in both the Energy and Utilities segments. The Energy segment was up $263.3 million or 27% from the prior year driven by increased renewables activity as we had over $100 million of revenue pulled forward from the second half of 2025 and almost $50 million pulled forward from 2026. This was partly offset by lower pipeline activity. The Utilities segment was up $72.2 million or 11.6% from the prior year, driven by higher activity across all service lines, gas, communications and power delivery. Gross profit for the second quarter was $231.7 million, an increase of $45 million or 24.1% compared to the prior year. This is primarily due to increased revenue in both segments and improved margins in the Utilities segment. As a result, gross margins were 12.3% for the quarter compared to 11.9% in the prior year. Turning to our segment results. Utilities segment gross profit was $97.5 million, up $33.5 million or 52.3% compared to the prior year. This was driven by improved profitability across all service lines, but particularly in power delivery, where gross profit more than doubled from Q2 of the prior year. As a result, gross margins improved to 14.1% compared to 10.3% in the prior year. We are seeing the positive results of our strategic efforts to improve margins in the Utilities segment. Increased customer activity, a favorable mix of project work and improved productivity are all contributing to higher revenue and margins in the segment. While we are always mindful of our normal seasonal decline in Q4, our year-to-date results and current outlook give us confidence that utilities margins will be in the 10% to 12% range for 2025. In the Energy segment, gross profit was $134.2 million for the quarter, an increase of $11.5 million or 9.4% from the prior year due to higher revenue. Gross margins in this segment were 10.8%, down from 12.6% in the prior year. The decrease in margin was driven by fewer project closeouts compared to the prior year and increased cost on certain renewables projects due to unfavorable weather conditions during the quarter. However, we anticipate that margins in the Energy segment will tick up in the back half of the year. Looking at SG&A. Expenses in the second quarter were $104.5 million, an increase of only $4.4 million compared to the prior year. As a percent of revenue, SG&A declined from the prior year to 5.5% as we control SG&A growth to produce improved operating leverage. We do not expect to see material increases in SG&A in the second half of the year and expect SG&A to be just below 6% of revenue for the full year 2025. Net interest expense in the quarter was $7.6 million, down $9.6 million from the prior year due to lower average debt balances and interest rates. Based on current trends and expectations, we are updating our guidance for interest expense to be between $33 million to $37 million for the full year of 2025, down from the $44 million to $48 million we anticipated at the beginning of the year. Our effective tax rate was 29% for the quarter, and we expect that this rate will be consistent for the full year. Net income increased to $84.3 million or $1.54 per fully diluted share, both up around 70% from the prior year. Adjusted EPS increased over 60% to $1.68 per fully diluted share, and adjusted EBITDA was up over 30% to $154.8 million compared to the prior year. Transitioning to cash flow. Q2 cash from operations was a little over $78 million, a record for our second quarter, bringing our year-to-date operating cash flow to nearly $145 million. This represents a $157 million improvement in operating cash flow from the first half of last year. The increase was driven by higher net income and favorable working capital leverage. We are on pace for another solid year of operating cash flow that we currently expect to range between $250 million to $300 million. Moving over to the balance sheet. We maintained strong liquidity of $690 million, which includes approximately $390 million of cash and a little over $300 million in available borrowing capacity on our revolver. Our trailing 12-month net debt-to-EBITDA ratio dropped to 0.5x EBITDA at the end of Q2. This puts us in a great position to continue to deploy capital to invest organically in the high-growth, higher-margin areas of the business, pay down debt and be opportunistic around M&A that meets our strategic and financial criteria. Total backlog at the end of Q2 was just under $11.5 billion, an increase of approximately $100 million sequentially from Q1. Fixed backlog was lower by $500 million for Q1, primarily due to the timing of energy segment bookings. As David mentioned, we have had a good start to the third quarter in renewables and energy awards and believe that we will see bookings accelerate for the remainder of the year into 2026. MSA backlog is up a little over $600 million from Q1, driven primarily by increased activity across our utility businesses, particularly power delivery. We are encouraged by the growing funnel of opportunities across the entire company and believe we are on track for a strong back half of the year. While the timing of contract signings and our progress on existing work can vary, we expect to be in a solid backlog position to start 2026. Before turning it back over to David, I'll close with our updated guidance. We are increasing EPS guidance to $4.40 to $4.60 per fully diluted share, adjusted EPS guidance to $4.90 to $5.10 per fully diluted share and adjusted EBITDA guidance to $490 million to $510 million for the full year 2025. Additionally, we are increasing the range of our gross capital expenditures by $10 million at the midpoint to $100 million to $120 million, primarily for equipment to support growth. We are extremely pleased with our performance in the first half of the year and excited about the potential for continued earnings and margin expansion in the quarters ahead. I'll now turn it back over to David.